Search Constraints
Filtering by:
Language
English
Remove constraint Language: English
Subject
Arab-Israeli conflict
Remove constraint Subject: Arab-Israeli conflict
1 - 2 of 2
Number of results to display per page
Search Results
-
- Description:
- Richard Groves was the pastor of Wake Forest Baptist Church in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The service begins with music (0:00-1:49). There is a moment of prayer (1:50-4:03). The visitors at the chapel service are recognized (4:03-4:59). Richard Groves is introduced as the chapel speaker (5:00-6:32). The choir sings an anthem (6:33-9:37). Groves reads Scripture from Matthew 5 and shares an anecdote from his life to illustrate retaliation (9:38-12:32). Groves shares that the church needs to give a critique about giving an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth and teach it (12:33-15:20). He discusses this idea regarding the tension between the Israelis and Arabs and how applying such a principal in practical ways “works” (15:21-26:35). Groves argues that only the way of Jesus holds open the possibility that one’s enemies will cease being one’s enemies (26:36-29:23). Groves ends the service in a word of prayer (29:24-30:31).
- Subject:
- Retribution, Peace, and Arab-Israeli conflict
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Groves, Richard, 1943-
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- April 23, 1986
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_Richard_Groves_1986-04-23
-
- Description:
- B. Elmo Scoggin was Professor of Hebrew and Old Testament. The service begins with a word of prayer (00:00-01:46). B. Elmo Scoggin is introduced as the Faculty Lecturer (01:47-05:55). Scoggin begins his lecture by tracing the history of the people of Israel from the call of Abraham to the creation of the modern Israeli state in the 1948 (05:56-20:35). He argues that idea of an Arab Palestinian state is a part of a big political lie based on an antisemitic bias, and he believes that the truth is the Arab states have a united hatred of Israel and an interest in destroying the sovereign state (20:36-35:57). Scoggin concludes with the question of how we can account to God if we allow Israel to be wiped out, and he argues that our own self-preservation is at stake if we tolerate antisemitism (35:58-53:10). The service ends with a benediction (53:11-54:31).
- Subject:
- Antisemitism , Jews--History, and Arab-Israeli conflict
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Scoggin, B. Elmo, 1915-2011
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- April 24, 1980
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Faculty_Lecture_B_Elmo_Scoggin_1980-04-24